12-20-11_Peer to Peer Working Group Meeting Notes

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Peer to Peer Working Group Meeting Notes December 20, 2011 Peer-to-Peer Group Organization The larger peer-to-peer group meetings will be held in conjunction with the SCE All Hands meeting and will discuss long-term issues and solutions for the Partnerships. The Peer-to-Peer Working Group meetings will be held quarterly and will discuss issues that require more immediate action. Account Managers and Program Managers Account managers seem to have too many cities to manage. Because the process to complete projects depends on account managers, in some cases, projects cannot move forward. There is a lack of clarity as to which responsibilities fall to the program managers and which fall to the account managers, and in some situations, both account managers and program managers are hesitant to give up responsibilities. Possible solutions being discussed at SCE include a pure module, in which each account manager are assigned only local governments customers. Partnership representatives suggested that a collaborative approach and greater use of 3rd party technical services could be used to provide improved service to cities. After discussion, the SCE and the Working Group decided that each individual Partnership team would work together to fill in gaps in work where necessary. LPAs On many partnership teams, there is a lack of communication between the LPAs and the rest of the Partnership team. This is especially difficult because, while some LPAs attend monthly partnership meetings, others do not. After discussion, SCE and the Working Group decided that with the LPAs, communication and working as a team needed to be improved. Energy Leader Model Community Savings For some cities, because of their size, dominant zoning type (i.e. industrial or residential), lack of large home improvement store, or a variety of other reasons, it is difficult for them to meet the community requirements for the Energy Leader Model. This discourages some cities from participating in the Partnership. SCE concurred that alternative approaches to meeting the community savings requirement should be available to cities; however, the change must be simple and consistent and must demonstrate cities’ commitment to educating the community on energy efficiency. The Working Group proposed a checklist, similar to those used for the Demand Response requirements, in which a city could select certain items to fulfill. This would be measurable and clear, yet under the cities’ direct control. After discussion, SCE and the Working Group agreed that both sides would develop a proposal for changes. Additionally, SCE would confirm that there are no regulatory barriers to implementing this type of change to the ELM. The Working Group will provide their proposals to SCE by January 15, 2012. Municipal Savings The Working Group requested that cities be able to receive EE savings credit for projects that no longer receive SCE incentives (i.e. reflective street signs); for which the incentives have been upstreamed (i.e. HVAC); and for projects that were completed out of sequence and therefore cannot receive incentives. Because of the fiscal impact, SCE indicated that savings could not be credited for EE projects that are not eligible for incentives. However, the same appeals process will continue for projects that were completed out of sequence.


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